New sci-fi romance from the RITA Award nominated author of GHOST PLANET!* * * Our world is no longer our own. We engineered a race of superior fighters -- the Manti, mutant humans with insect-like abilities. Twenty-five years ago they all but destroyed us. In Sanctuary, some of us survive. Eking out our existence. Clinging to the past. Some of us intend to do more than survive.* * *Asha and Pax -- strangers and enemies -- find themselves stranded together on the border of the last human city, neither with a memory of how they got there.

Asha is an archivist working to preserve humanity’s most valuable resource -- information -- viewed as the only means of resurrecting their society.

Pax is Manti, his Scarab ship a menacing presence in the skies over Sanctuary, keeping the last dregs of humanity in check.Neither of them is really what they seem, and what humanity believes about the Manti is a lie. With their hearts and fates on a collision course, they must unlock each other's secrets and forge a bond of trust before a rekindled conflict pushes their two races into repeating the mistakes of the past.

Excerpt from The Ophelia
Prophecy

By Sharon Lynn Fisher

Water pooled around Asha’s hips, soaking her
thin cotton dress. She studied the glimmering surface of the lake, and the
rocky hillside looming on the opposite side.

The
reservoir. How
did I get here?

Closing her eyes, she pressed her fingers to her
temples. The last thing she remembered was climbing to the roof of the Archive
with her father. It was a beautiful spring evening, and they’d planned to
picnic and watch the sunset. She’d stepped off the ladder onto the corrugated,
white-washed metal, and then . . .

Sleep, Ophelia.

She grasped at the words as they breezed across
her consciousness. They had the ring of command, yet she had no memory of who
had spoken them, or why.

A masculine moan sounded, so close she rolled into a crouch and
skittered into the shallow water. The lithe movement of her own body surprised
her almost as much as the unexpected voice.

Just beyond the depression she’d left on the
beach, a naked form stirred. A stranger. His gaze riveted on her. He sat up
straight, fists digging into the sand. No, not
sand. His body rested on a bed of some soft, fibrous material.

She remembered the flimsy dress—now wet and
clinging to her body—and hugged her bent legs, concealing herself as best she
could. Her heart pounded against her thighs.

“Who are you?” they both demanded.

So the confusion was mutual.

“You first,” he said. A command, not a courtesy.

She hesitated. The man now seemed
familiar—something about the eyes. They curved down at the inside corners,
making them appear to slant under his dark, arched eyebrows. But she couldn’t
place him.

He rose to a crouch, eyes moving over her like
an extension of his arms, prying at the locked arms that concealed her body
from him.

She reached up to release the clip that held her
coiled hair to the back of her head, thinking she would cover herself with it.
She gasped to discover her heavy tresses were gone.

Tears of
confusion welled in her eyes. Fear knotted her stomach.

“What’s your name?” the stranger insisted.

“Asha,” she whispered, uncertain. There’d been
another name a moment ago. A name that had seemed to mean something.

Her throat tightened, strangling her words, as
she said, “I don’t understand…”

“What are you doing here?”

She raised her eyes to his face, shrinking from
the heat of his gaze. “I don’t know.”

His eyes bored into hers, probing for the
thoughts behind them. He frowned, brow furrowing with doubt. He doesn’t believe me.

“Who are you?”
she repeated, indignation nudging past the fear that gripped her.

He slid his hands up his shoulders to rub his
neck, baring the hard lines of his stomach, revealing pale marks under either
side of his ribcage. Scars.

“Paxton,” he said. One hand moved to the back of
his head, and he winced. He probed the sore spot with his fingers.

“Why are you here?”

“I don’t know.”

She glanced again at the fibrous nest. “What’s
that?”

“Carapace.”

She blinked at him, the meaning of the familiar
word eluding her. Before she could question him further, he rose to his feet, scanning
the horizon. Her eyes lingered on the marks below his ribs.

He stood so long—motionless and studying the
edge of the sky—she began to think he’d forgotten her. His composure was
troubling. There was a shared mystery here, clearly, but they were not equal
participants.

“How can you be so calm?” she asked, voice
lifting with anxiety. “Do you know something I don’t? Has this kind of thing
happened to you before?”

Paxton glanced down at the nest. “Yes.”

She gaped at him, but the low whine of an
approaching ship changed the subject. Her heart jumped as the black beetle
hummed into view, dragging its own reflection across the surface of the lake.

She sprang to her feet. “That’s an enemy ship!”
she cried. “We have to go!”

Technically the war was over. Very little left
for the Manti to fight. But they still ruled the air, keeping tabs on the last
dregs of humanity. Citizens of Sanctuary were forbidden to wander away from the
city, and the reservoir marked the border.

Again his eyes skewered her to the spot. “No, we
wait here. That’s my ship.”

“Your ship? I don’t…”

She side-stepped a couple meters down the beach,
eyeing him fearfully.

Overhead, the beetle whirred to rest, cupped
wings lifting to allow a controlled vertical landing. With a series of loud
clicks it nestled into the sand, hover gear lowering and locking back against
the hull. The lusterless, black skin of the vessel looked like rubber, but she
knew it was a secreted resin. As she stared, frozen to the spot, the hull
lightened from jet to blond, until it was almost invisible against the sand.

“Pax, you okay?” a feminine voice sounded from
the ship’s external com.

“I’m okay,” called Asha’s companion. “Drop the
ramp.”

“Who’s that with you?”

Paxton frowned at Asha. “I was hoping you could
tell me.”

About Sharon Lynn Fisher:

A Romance Writers of America RITA Award finalist and a three-time RWA Golden Heart Award finalist, SHARON LYNN FISHER lives in the Pacific Northwest. She writes books for the geeky at heart—sci-fi flavored stories full of adventure and romance—and battles writerly angst with baked goods, Irish tea, and champagne. Her works include Ghost Planet (2012), The Ophelia Prophecy (2014), and Echo 8 (2014). You can visit her online at SharonLynnFisher.com.